Emily Leppien helps patients reduce pain, opioid use
Chronic pain management, reduction of opioid use are her goals
Emily Leppien specialized in neurology and psychiatry during her two years of residency training, completing a longitudinal rotation at the Dent Neurologic Institute in Buffalo as well as one in a substance abuse clinic in Buffalo after earning her PharmD from the Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences.
鈥淢y residence training specialized in neurology and psychiatry,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey usually fall together. What people don鈥檛 know is that psychiatric training is about 50 percent neurology and part of that neurology is pain management.鈥
Leppien joined the faculty at 黑料视频鈥檚 School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences in 2018 as a clinical assistant professor of pharmacy practice. With Lourdes Hospital implementing more clinical pharmacists in their outpatient clinics to serve patients, she now serves as a clinical neuropsychiatric pharmacy specialist at Lourdes Hospital Center for Pain & Wellness. She works as part of an interprofessional team providing pain management to patients at the clinic, seeing about 10 patients a week ranging in age from their 20s to their 80s. She also consults with members of the healthcare team as needed.
The patients referred to Leppien are those who the physician feels her intervention will benefit. And she often provides consultation on particular drugs or answers questions about supplements a patient is taking or something medication-related, such as what happens if a patient stops taking a medication.
What might surprise some is the focus Leppien and the team have to lessen the amount of opioids prescribed for chronic pain. 鈥淵es, some patients require opioids, but we try to use integrative medicine, which includes non-medication related therapies like chiropractic, massage, acupuncture, ultra sound therapy and infrared sauna therapy. Evidence suggests that pain outcomes are better, patients have less pain and opioids are more effective if used in conjunction with these integrative therapies.鈥
For Leppien, the goal is to lower the doses or prescribe smaller quantities of opioids to result in better health for the patient 鈥 and a smaller amount of opioids floating around in the community.
鈥淲hat has happened is that, in response to the opioid epidemic, insurance companies and some pharmacies are limiting the amount of opioids a patient can get,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 unfortunate because some patients really need them and when their supply is cut off they turn to illicit sources to avoid going through withdrawal.鈥
At the clinic, patients might also be prescribed non-opioid medications such as naltrexone, ketamine and medical cannabis to reduce the amount of opioids being prescribed.
Leppien is CDTM certified 鈥 Collaborative Drug Therapy Management certified 鈥 a designation she earned after having worked closely with physicians as a clinical pharmacist, earning board certification and completing a residency.
Not all pharmacists complete residencies, but it was important to Leppien. 鈥淚 did a residency because I wanted to specialize in neuropsychology given that population of patients is highly stigmatized,鈥 she said. 鈥淢ental illness and pain carry huge stigmas. Pain is subjective and everyone experiences it differently, but chronic pain is the leading cause of disability.鈥
The stigma can also come from healthcare providers who are not comfortable with opioids and see them as being harmful, she added, so when a patient is on opioids the provider automatically wonders what鈥檚 wrong with them.
鈥淚 went into this field to be able to educate providers and students in hopes of removing the stigma with these illnesses and the number-one way to do that is through education,鈥 she said. 鈥淪tudents are our future healthcare providers and giving them experience working with patients with these illnesses shows them they鈥檙e no different than you or me. Understanding how to treat patients and not have a preconceived notion based on the medication a patent is picking up is important and that鈥檚 where my passion comes from.鈥
In neuropsychology, many of the medicines used for treatments come with a slew of side effects or drug interactions and pharmacists can play a crucial role in managing them, Leppien added. Plus, pharmacists are some of the most accessible healthcare professionals in a rural area.
鈥淪ome of our patients have pain due to a work-related or auto accident, but we also see patients with no known reason; they just have pain 鈥 maybe migraine pain, fibromyalgia pain 鈥 so there鈥檚 a huge scope in the patient population,鈥 Leppien said.
Her CDTM certification allows her to work and collaborate with a physician and make recommendations on the physician鈥檚 behalf as a recognized provider. Leppien counsels on medication, evaluates and looks at a patient鈥檚 medication profile, and spends a lot of time eliminating medications for patients.
鈥淚鈥檓 there to help the provider who might be seeing up to 30 patients a day,鈥 she said. 鈥淪taying current on recommendations is one of the biggest things we can do to educate them.
鈥淪ometimes one medication is started and doesn鈥檛 work for a patient, other times a medication is added and the first one isn鈥檛 taken away. Or, if a patient is on two medications, perhaps they can be given one that can do the same things to try to eliminate the number of medications a patient has to take,鈥 she said. 鈥淓liminating unnecessary medications decreases the risk of interactions or side effects.鈥
Another aspect of Leppien鈥檚 medication detective work is to search literature to find medications that aren鈥檛 commonly known to work for pain or a specialized illness. 鈥淔or instance, ketamine is typically used to sedate a patient for surgery, but lower doses can be effective for pain management with few side effects,鈥 she said. 鈥淣altrexone is a very safe drug with few interactions or side effects and using it at low doses has helped with pain and allowed patients to use less opioids.鈥
And when asked about her role in the clinic? 鈥淚t feels good,鈥 Leppien said. 鈥淕etting a smile, even just changing one person or helping one person. Having the patient say 鈥榯hank you鈥 or the student learn something. When that happens, I feel like I鈥檝e done my job.
鈥淚f I ask a student something and they know the answer, I think, 鈥榊ES!鈥欌
Leppien is also conducting research on some of the non-opioid medications she works with.
鈥淩ight now I鈥檓 trying to document and look at the effect naltrexone and medical marijuana have on pain and if patients are requiring less opioids,鈥 she said. 鈥淚s their pain being managed? Are patients with good pain control and less opioids using the integrative methods? I鈥檓 trying to improve pain and reduce opioid use and looking at how we can do that.鈥
Leppien hopes to quantify and publish her results so other institutions can learn from them. 鈥淚t goes back to the limitations of some insurance companies or pharmacies not covering or prescribing unless there is a pain management specialist involved, and in rural areas that鈥檚 limited,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o, what can other providers recommend if a patient can鈥檛 see a pain management specialist? Other therapies do really help and not everything is just fixed with a pill. It takes work and time to go the integrative route, but it works and maybe will allow someone more time at work or more time to play with their grandchild.
鈥淲e need both medications and integrative therapies to help people live their best lives in the best manner possible.鈥